BY MIA FREEDMAN
To my darling girl,
Today should have been your 12th birthday. I wonder what we would have been doing today had I ever got to meet you? Probably discussing The Hunger Games at length but who knows?
I think that’s one of the toughest parts of losing a baby during pregnancy or shortly afterwards.
You never know who you’re grieving for. So when I think of you, there’s….a blank. A sad black hole in my heart. Nothing for my mind to latch onto for solace or comfort. I do have two memories actually. There’s the way my body looked when you were nestled safely inside it.
And the image of you on the ultrasound screen. Frozen. No heartbeat. Just floating. Inside my body and out of my life.
It’s always a funny day, the anniversary of the day you were meant to be born. Those first few years were very raw although I had so many different significant days, it was ameliorated a bit between them in a sort of confusing spread of grief.
There was the day I found out you’d died, about halfway through my pregnancy.
Then there was the day you left my body, at the hospital.
And your ‘birth’ day. The day you were never born. The day I didn’t get to hold you, to look into your little face and make that connection between the baby I’d felt moving inside me and the little person whose life would unfold before me. With me.
I can’t get a handle on what you would have been like, what you would have looked like and that breaks my heart in a way that’s really hard to explain. It’s a very strange grief, grieving for someone you never knew. I have no memories of our times together, no images of your smile or your smell or all the precious details you keep locked tightly in your heart after someone has gone.